The Online Books Page

Lucy A. Delaney

(Delaney, Lucy A. (Lucy Ann), 1828?-)


Image from Wikimedia Commons

Lucy Delaney (née Lucy Ann Berry; c. 1828–1830 – August 31, 1910) was an African American seamstress, slave narrator, and community leader. She was born into slavery and was primarily held by the Major Taylor Berry and Judge Robert Wash families. As a teenager, she was the subject of a freedom lawsuit, because her mother lived in Illinois, a free state, longer than 90 days. According to Illinois state law, enslaved people that reside in Illinois for more than 90 days should be indentured and freed. The country's rule of partus sequitur ventrem asserts that if the mother was free at the child's birth, the child should be free. After Delaney's mother, Polly Berry (also known as Polly Wash), filed a lawsuit for herself, she filed a lawsuit on her daughter's behalf in 1842. Delaney was held in jail for 17 months while awaiting the trial. (From Wikipedia)

More about Lucy A. Delaney: More specific subject:
 

Books about Lucy A. Delaney -- Books by Lucy A. Delaney

Books about Lucy A. Delaney:

Filed under: Delaney, Lucy A. (Lucy Ann), 1828?- Filed under: Delaney, Lucy A. (Lucy Ann), 1828?- -- Trials, litigation, etc.

Books by Lucy A. Delaney:

Find more by Lucy A. Delaney at your library, or elsewhere.

Help with reading books -- Report a bad link -- Suggest a new listing

Home -- Search -- New Listings -- Authors -- Titles -- Subjects -- Serials

Books -- News -- Features -- Archives -- The Inside Story

Edited by John Mark Ockerbloom (onlinebooks@pobox.upenn.edu)
OBP copyrights and licenses.